- Nontechnical people will just click
okallow without knowing what it means.- Technical people do not need those guardrails.
I wonder if there's any way to get rid of this alert? Yet another piece of pseudo-security nonsense Apple is obsessed with.
It looks like this alert pesters me now every time I login.
Sequoia 15.1, latest beta.
Thanks!
View attachment 2428821
As an aside I don't run garbage software(anything from Google, Mozilla, MS, Meta, Adobe
Once given, the permission should persist. Quit Chrome and turn it off and on again in Privacy & Security – Local Network.It looks like this alert pesters me now every time I login.
in Privacy & Security – Local Network.
I would remove all and give the permission again to the current one.Chrome is listed there 5 times already.
I have not replaced icons or anything like that and also have Chrome listed 5 times there.Ok I think I know why this alert keeps appearing. That's because after each Chrome update, I replace the new disgusting icon with Chrome's original icon. Now I see that after this a new instance of Chrome is added to the Privacy & Security > Local Network section. I don't know if it happens after each time I replace the icon, but Chrome is listed there 5 times already.
If I saw the dialogue, it would be because the app needs my DNS (pihole) or I want to connect to a local service on my network.If I saw the dialog in the OP above, I would click "Don't Allow".
I don't want google prying/spying on me at all.
At least, I'll do whatever I can to prevent it.
(and no, I don't use google for searching... ANYWHERE).